The International Energy Agency (IEA) recently analysed the impact on the demand for industrial metals of the transition to clean energy policies.1 The technologies considered are:
- Low-carbon power generation: solar, wind, other renewables and nuclear power;
- Electricity networks;
- Electric vehicles and battery storage;
- Hydrogen, including electrolysers and fuel cells.
The IEA examined two alternative scenarios. The first, the Stated Energy Policies Scenario (STEPS), estimates the effects on industrial metals demand resulting from policies already approved or announced by governments. The second, the Sustainable Development Scenario (SDS), considers the impact of the policies needed to achieve the three energy-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) of the United Nations:
- to achieve universal access to energy (SDG 7);
- to tackle climate change (SDG 13);
- to reduce the severe health impacts of air pollution (part of SDG 3).2
The IEA estimates that over the next 20 years, total demand for industrial metals related to clean energy production, storage and distribution will double in the STEPS and quadruple in the SDS.3 This will be driven mainly by the development of distribution networks and of the electric car and battery storage industries, followed by solar and wind power generation, while nuclear and other clean energy technologies will have a more limited impact. Copper, aluminium, nickel and zinc will satisfy more than 80% of the anticipated total industrial metals demand generated by the coming energy transition.
Table 1a shows the size of the demand impact for each of the four metals relative to 2020 demand in the two scenarios.4 For the SDS,
Table 1b shows the shares of demand growth between 2020 and 2040 for the four metals by type of clean energy technology and highlights their complementarity in the development of clean energy technologies.